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Homo Curans (II) Homo Curans (II)
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Felix culpa Felix culpa
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What Burns the Heart What Burns the Heart
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Through the Darkest Valley Through the Darkest Valley
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The Concern to Be without Concern The Concern to Be without Concern
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Epicurus Epicurus
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter returns to the Hyginus fable with which this study began in order to specify further the semantic ramifications of Latin cura, and hence securitas. The Hyginus fable insists that care should possess mankind—Cura eum possideat—which is to say that, if ever removed from care, humanity would be robbed of its humanity. Interestingly, the similar story of mankind's formation in the book of Genesis takes place in a garden, which would normally be a place requiring careful attention. The gardener is, indeed, the paradigmatic caretaker. Yet, in the Hebrew account, the first humans inhabit a garden where everything is already provided. This carefree existence may account for other reversals that the biblical story reveals in comparison with the Roman fable.
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